01-05-2012, 01:33 AM
She's on page 142 of my 1997 Klaber-Melanson Shadow Play.
Deposed in 1968. Shown the summary in 1992; found fifteen departures, chiefly that she said at the time, fourteen, not eight, shots; from multiple directions, not the same direction.
And let's do have Thane Eugene Cesar explain his lie that he'd sold the H & R 922 before the event. And his lie that he did not draw and fire that night.
No more Moldea "clearing" by polygraph, and smearing by making up things "Sirhan said" when there was no such event.
The agency whose director was a Mafia Denier, who appointed his partner Number Two, who knew Lee Oswald's cheek was not merely negative, but most clearly and sincerely negative.
And Hank Hernandez--at a time when CIA/AID was helping Rockefeller "pacify" the inconvenient Amazonian Indians.
Regarding the public discrediting of researchers by carefully administered poison pills, two items from http://911blogger.com/node/19880:
For a background on William Pepper's sometimes poor ability to identify disinformation, see:
From Peter Dale Scott's Road to 9/11, Introduction end notes:
"Most of what Pepper writes about army surveillance of King is documented and corroborated (cf. Steve Tompkins, "Army Feared King, Secretly Watched Him. Spying On Blacks Started 75 Years Ago," Memphis Commercial Appeal, March 21, 1993
http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/199...tched-him/.
Unfortunately, Pepper also transmitted the claim made to him that the 20th Special Forces Group had a sniper team in Memphis on April 4, 1968, to ensure that King was murdered. I believe from my own research that the sniper team story was disinformation from high sources in order to discredit Pepper. In particular, an alleged authorizing cable, citing Operation Garden Plot, is to a trained reader a self-revealing forgery."
From Lisa Pease's Real History Archives:
"Remember what happened to William Pepper? He believed some Ayers-like informants on the MLK case and made a central case against a former military man whom Pepper believed (and wrote) was then dead. So on national TV, what happened? The "dead" guy walked out onto the stage. His living didn't negate all of Pepper's work in reality. But in the popular mind? Pepper was the guy who had 'gotten it wrong' on TV. I fear strongly the same will happen to those who pursue this line of inquiry."
http://realhistoryarchives.blogspot.com/2006/11/did-cia-kill-bobby-kenne...
Phil's footnote: I was watching that April 19, 1997 Turning Point when the smarmy Forrest Sawyer produced the "dead" sniper. Would ABC cover the rest of the case that closely? That there was no credible witness to Ray in the boarding house bathroom, no shot from the window until Memphis Sanitation cut the vegetation the next day, that the police were at first in pursuit of two other suspects, that the maneuvering of King from the hotel and from the motel's inner room were suspicious, the presence of Marrell McCollough the military intelligence agent in the parking lot as the shot was fired, up the stairs to check King's vitals--later a CIA officer answering the phone in Langley. . . .
With eighty in the pantry, no one saw Sirhan's muzzle an inch from Kennedy's nape--
It's time to render unto Cesar--but all we get is Ayers citing Sirhan Sirhan as a political prisoner.
Well then.
Deposed in 1968. Shown the summary in 1992; found fifteen departures, chiefly that she said at the time, fourteen, not eight, shots; from multiple directions, not the same direction.
And let's do have Thane Eugene Cesar explain his lie that he'd sold the H & R 922 before the event. And his lie that he did not draw and fire that night.
No more Moldea "clearing" by polygraph, and smearing by making up things "Sirhan said" when there was no such event.
The agency whose director was a Mafia Denier, who appointed his partner Number Two, who knew Lee Oswald's cheek was not merely negative, but most clearly and sincerely negative.
And Hank Hernandez--at a time when CIA/AID was helping Rockefeller "pacify" the inconvenient Amazonian Indians.
Regarding the public discrediting of researchers by carefully administered poison pills, two items from http://911blogger.com/node/19880:
For a background on William Pepper's sometimes poor ability to identify disinformation, see:
From Peter Dale Scott's Road to 9/11, Introduction end notes:
"Most of what Pepper writes about army surveillance of King is documented and corroborated (cf. Steve Tompkins, "Army Feared King, Secretly Watched Him. Spying On Blacks Started 75 Years Ago," Memphis Commercial Appeal, March 21, 1993
http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/199...tched-him/.
Unfortunately, Pepper also transmitted the claim made to him that the 20th Special Forces Group had a sniper team in Memphis on April 4, 1968, to ensure that King was murdered. I believe from my own research that the sniper team story was disinformation from high sources in order to discredit Pepper. In particular, an alleged authorizing cable, citing Operation Garden Plot, is to a trained reader a self-revealing forgery."
From Lisa Pease's Real History Archives:
"Remember what happened to William Pepper? He believed some Ayers-like informants on the MLK case and made a central case against a former military man whom Pepper believed (and wrote) was then dead. So on national TV, what happened? The "dead" guy walked out onto the stage. His living didn't negate all of Pepper's work in reality. But in the popular mind? Pepper was the guy who had 'gotten it wrong' on TV. I fear strongly the same will happen to those who pursue this line of inquiry."
http://realhistoryarchives.blogspot.com/2006/11/did-cia-kill-bobby-kenne...
Phil's footnote: I was watching that April 19, 1997 Turning Point when the smarmy Forrest Sawyer produced the "dead" sniper. Would ABC cover the rest of the case that closely? That there was no credible witness to Ray in the boarding house bathroom, no shot from the window until Memphis Sanitation cut the vegetation the next day, that the police were at first in pursuit of two other suspects, that the maneuvering of King from the hotel and from the motel's inner room were suspicious, the presence of Marrell McCollough the military intelligence agent in the parking lot as the shot was fired, up the stairs to check King's vitals--later a CIA officer answering the phone in Langley. . . .
With eighty in the pantry, no one saw Sirhan's muzzle an inch from Kennedy's nape--
It's time to render unto Cesar--but all we get is Ayers citing Sirhan Sirhan as a political prisoner.
Well then.

